The band OK Go uses technology, ingenuity and mildly dangerous stunts to reinvent a dying genre. After 350 million views, they tell their secrets.
DAMIAN KULASH JR, lead singer of OK Go, likes to joke that his tombstone will read: “One of those treadmill guys.” He’s referring to the band’s 2006 breakout music video, in which the four members performed a synchronised dance on some gym equipment. If this were all Kulash is remembered for, it wouldn’t be a terrible thing: ‘Here It Goes Again’ has been viewed more than 37 million times. But we’ve got a better epitaph for the 41-year-old singer: The King of Viral Videos.
The band now puts out single-take stunt videos yearly, each with tens of millions of views. The members toss out ideas – “We should do something with dogs” – and what emerges are wild feats of engineering and imagination that often take months of planning to execute.
“To be honest, it’s a bad business model,” Kulash says. “The way to make money on YouTube is to make something extremely fast and sh*tty, and do it often. But this is a decent business model for a bunch of nerds who like making stuff.”
We wanted to get the story behind the band’s viral videos: what inspires them, how they’re planned, and what actually happens on set during filming. So we rented a studio in Los Angeles, queued up our favourite clips and watched live with Kulash. These are the stories he told us. – Mickey Rapkin
1 THIS TOO SHALL PASS (2010)
With 12 engineers and Kulash’s father, OK Go built a two-storey Rube Goldberg machine.
After six months of working on this thing, we’re down to the night before shooting starts. We’re in an abandoned warehouse and the lights go out. A drunk driver hit the transformer. So we started testing the machine in the parking lot. People need saws and drills, so we hooked up to car batteries.
Bu hikaye Popular Mechanics South Africa dergisinin November 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Popular Mechanics South Africa dergisinin November 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
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